Agglomeration, Transport, and Regional Development in Indonesia

How effective are public interventions in addressing significant regional disparities in formal manufacturing concentration in a developing economy? The authors examine the aggregate and sectoral geographic concentration of manufacturing industries for Indonesia, and estimate the impact of factors influencing location choice at the firm level. They distinguish between natural advantage, including infrastructure endowments, wage rates, and natural resource endowments, and production externalities, arising from the co-location of firms in the same or complementary industries. The methodology pays special attention to empirically distinguishing the impact of measured production externalities from unobserved local characteristics. Depending on the sector, the authors find that a mix of both forms of regional advantage explains the geographic distribution of firms. Based on the estimated location choice model, they illustrate the potential impacts of policy interventions on manufacturing distribution by simulating the effectiveness of transport improvements on relocation of firms. Their findings suggest that improvements in transport infrastructure may only have limited effects in attracting industry to secondary industrial centers outside of Java, especially in sectors already established in leading regions. The findings underscore the challenges for addressing the industrial fortunes of lagging regions, either through local decentralized policy interventions or national policies focused on infrastructure development.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Deichmann, Uwe, Kaiser, Kai, Lall, Somik V., Shalizi, Zmarak
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-01
Subjects:ACCOUNTABILITY, ACCOUNTING, ALTERNATIVE POLICY OPTIONS, AUDITING, CITIES, CITY SIZE, CONSTRUCTION, COST OF LIVING, COST SAVINGS, DECENTRALIZATION, DECISION MAKING, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ELASTICITIES, EMPIRICAL STUDIES, EMPLOYMENT, ENDOGENEITY, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT, EQUILIBRIUM, EXTERNALITIES, FOOD PRODUCTS, FOREST COVER, FOREST RESOURCES, FORESTS, HIGH LEVELS, INSURANCE, INTERMEDIATE GOODS, LABOR COSTS, LAND COVER, LAND SUPPLY, LEVIES, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, LOCAL GOVERNMENT TAXATION, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, LOGGING, MIGRATION, MUNICIPALITIES, NATURAL RESOURCE BASE, NATURAL RESOURCES, PERMITS, POLICY MAKERS, POPULATION DENSITIES, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION PROCESS, PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY, PRODUCTIVITY, PROFITABILITY, PUBLIC POLICY, QUALITY OF LIFE, RECYCLING, REVENUE SOURCES, SAVINGS, SPILLOVERS, TAXATION, TRANSACTION COSTS, TRANSPORT, UNCERTAINTY, URBAN AREAS, URBANIZATION, USER CHARGES, WAGE RATES, WAGES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/01/5589082/agglomeration-transport-regional-development-indonesia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8900
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